Loss of the Sultana
Audio Preview
Share or Embed This Item
- Publication date
- 2018-07-16
- Usage
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
LibriVox recording of Loss of the Sultana by Chester D. Berry.
Read in English by Roger Melin
April, 1865. The country was in turmoil. The U.S. Civil War had come to an end, thousands of Union prisoners of war had recently been released, and President Lincoln had just been assassinated. The steamship 'Sultana' left New Orleans on April 21st, traveled to Vicksburg, Mississippi where it took on 1,965 federal soldiers and 35 officers, all recently released prisoners of war, most of them held at the prison camps of Cahaba (or Cahawba, near Selma, Alabama) and Andersonville (in southwest Georgia), and now finally headed for their homes. The 'Sultana' arrived in Memphis, Tennessee on April 26th and headed north toward Cairo, Illinois carrying over 2,100 passengers, but designed for a capacity of only 376. At approximately 2:00 a.m. of the 27th, mere hours after the assassination of John Wilkes Booth, the 'Sultana' mysteriously exploded while steaming about 7 miles north of Memphis, killing over 1,500 on board (estimates vary). The sole reason this incident received such scant attention at the time, and ever since, is the fact that the country was understandably absorbed in the recent assassinations. Subsequent inquiry into the 'Sultana' disaster would uncover some startling revelations into its cause, some believe leading directly to the topmost levels of the U.S. Government. The loss of the 'Sultana' was the greatest maritime disaster in U.S. history, up until the bombing of Pearl Harbor. This book, composed by Chester Berry, one of the survivors, is unique in that it gives firsthand account from well over 100 of the survivors of the tragedy in their own words. Note - The online e-text (link provided) includes 3 lists for reference that are not included in this audio release: 1 - An official list of prisoners of war on the Sultana, including company served with 2 - Persons known to have been on board the Sultana, but not reported 3 - Name, Company, Regiment, and present (1892) residence of living survivors ( Roger Melin)
For further information, including links to online text, reader information, RSS feeds, CD cover or other formats (if available), please go to the LibriVox catalog page for this recording.
For more free audio books or to become a volunteer reader, visit LibriVox.org. M4B Audiobook 001-099 (258MB) M4B Audiobook 100-140 (84MB)
Read in English by Roger Melin
April, 1865. The country was in turmoil. The U.S. Civil War had come to an end, thousands of Union prisoners of war had recently been released, and President Lincoln had just been assassinated. The steamship 'Sultana' left New Orleans on April 21st, traveled to Vicksburg, Mississippi where it took on 1,965 federal soldiers and 35 officers, all recently released prisoners of war, most of them held at the prison camps of Cahaba (or Cahawba, near Selma, Alabama) and Andersonville (in southwest Georgia), and now finally headed for their homes. The 'Sultana' arrived in Memphis, Tennessee on April 26th and headed north toward Cairo, Illinois carrying over 2,100 passengers, but designed for a capacity of only 376. At approximately 2:00 a.m. of the 27th, mere hours after the assassination of John Wilkes Booth, the 'Sultana' mysteriously exploded while steaming about 7 miles north of Memphis, killing over 1,500 on board (estimates vary). The sole reason this incident received such scant attention at the time, and ever since, is the fact that the country was understandably absorbed in the recent assassinations. Subsequent inquiry into the 'Sultana' disaster would uncover some startling revelations into its cause, some believe leading directly to the topmost levels of the U.S. Government. The loss of the 'Sultana' was the greatest maritime disaster in U.S. history, up until the bombing of Pearl Harbor. This book, composed by Chester Berry, one of the survivors, is unique in that it gives firsthand account from well over 100 of the survivors of the tragedy in their own words. Note - The online e-text (link provided) includes 3 lists for reference that are not included in this audio release: 1 - An official list of prisoners of war on the Sultana, including company served with 2 - Persons known to have been on board the Sultana, but not reported 3 - Name, Company, Regiment, and present (1892) residence of living survivors ( Roger Melin)
For further information, including links to online text, reader information, RSS feeds, CD cover or other formats (if available), please go to the LibriVox catalog page for this recording.
For more free audio books or to become a volunteer reader, visit LibriVox.org. M4B Audiobook 001-099 (258MB) M4B Audiobook 100-140 (84MB)
- Addeddate
- 2018-07-16 17:00:46
- External_metadata_update
- 2019-03-31T08:48:57Z
- Identifier
- loss_of_the_sultana_by_chester_d_berry_1807_librivox
- Identifier-storj
- juhssppxo6wk52forpqmtuqw3anq/archive.org/loss_of_the_sultana_by_chester_d_berry_1807_librivox
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR)
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.11
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.14
- Ppi
- 600
- Run time
- 12:26:53
- Year
- 2018
comment
Reviews
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to
write a review.
27,309 Views
8 Favorites
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
128KBPS MP3
Uplevel BACK
867.8K
087 - A.J. Mourning download
840.9K
088 - A. Nihart download
796.0K
108 - C.G. Seabury download
1,009.5K
110 - I.N. Sheaffer download
967.0K
112 - A. Shoemaker download
977.6K
119 - E.J. Squire download
1,014.8K
125 - Marian Thomas download
64KBPS MP3
Uplevel BACK
615.1K
005 - Henry J. Lyda download
632.7K
014 - Wm. Barnes download
586.5K
015 - George Bement download
746.1K
018 - Wm. Bracken download
654.4K
031 - Wm. Crisp download
971.2K
035 - J.W. Dunsmore download
629.6K
039 - Martin Frazee download
611.5K
040 - W.S. Friesner download
994.1K
055 - Jacob Horner download
638.2K
057 - John H. James download
559.4K
058 - C.J. Johnson download
646.0K
059 - Lewis Johnson download
620.0K
063 - E.J. Kennedy download
433.7K
087 - A.J. Mourning download
420.2K
088 - A. Nihart download
675.0K
104 - Robert Rule download
690.7K
105 - O.C. Russell download
844.3K
106 - S.F. Sanders download
397.8K
108 - C.G. Seabury download
671.3K
109 - W.R. Shaul download
504.6K
110 - I.N. Sheaffer download
483.4K
112 - A. Shoemaker download
656.6K
114 - J.L. Slick download
711.2K
117 - Edward Sorgen download
488.7K
119 - E.J. Squire download
680.7K
124 - Wm. Thayer download
507.3K
125 - Marian Thomas download
560.8K
134 - G.W. Watts download
667.6K
140 - J.P. Zaizer download
VBR MP3
Uplevel BACK
848.9K
087 - A.J. Mourning download
827.9K
088 - A. Nihart download
773.8K
108 - C.G. Seabury download
964.7K
110 - I.N. Sheaffer download
965.3K
112 - A. Shoemaker download
987.3K
119 - E.J. Squire download
1,007.1K
125 - Marian Thomas download
IN COLLECTIONS
The LibriVox Free Audiobook CollectionUploaded by librivoxbooks on